Double check that the Default Gateway in TCP/IP properties is the routers LAN IP address (By default this is 192.168.1.1)
Without a gateway installed, there will be no Internet access.
After verifying this go to Start>Run and when the "Run" window appears type command into the "Open" Field, then click OK
Once the Command prompt appears type in:
ping 207.69.188.185.
If you don't get a reply, the gateway is not installed.
If there is a gateway already installed, check for any third party firewalls that may be installed on your computer. These can sometimes block Internet access.
For more information please see the related article on assigning a static IP address behind the router.
If still having problems, contact Linksys Technical Support.

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Related Questions:

for static IPs: check your router settings. router should be in "bridged" mode so that all the devices have own static "lan" ips like 192.168.0.1 / 192.168.0.255 router will have one lan ip static and one global ip(one it gets from service provider) you must manually give one address of 192.168.0.1 / 192.168.0.255 for your xbox. then give correct subnetmask (default 255.255.255.0) and gateway routers lan ip (default 192.168.0.254) you can aslo put routehrs lan ip as default dns if needed dmz or port forwarding is a tool in your router settings you can assign outside ports to specific ip i have only done manual port forwarding, not sure how dmz works.

Yes, it must be attached to the network
0. Install the yellow machine software on the PC
1.Log on to the Yellow Machine Manager. Go to “Logging On To Yellow Machine Manager” on page 8.
2.From the Yellow Machine Manager, click Network > Network Interfaces. The Network Interfaces window appears.
3.Click Edit.
4.Select Yes to Enable LAN Interface. Default: Yes (Enabled)
• If you select No, all other LAN option fields are blocked.
• If you disable the LAN Interface, the only access to the Yellow Machine appliance is
through the WAN port. Anthology Solutions does not recommend this configuration.
5.Check Enable DHCP Service if the DHCP service is needed for the PCs attached to the Yellow Machine appliance’s LAN ports. This setting makes the Yellow Machine appliance the DHCP server for your LAN (or sub-network), providing IP addresses dynamically for the clients connected to the LAN ports. Default: Checked (Disabled)
6.Select either Obtain IP Address Automatically from DHCP Server, or Static IP Address. Default: Static IP Address
• Choose Obtain IP Address Automatically from DHCP Server if your Yellow Machine
appliance connects to either a router that has DHCP service enabled or to a cable
modem. This setting makes the Yellow Machine appliance a DHCP client on your
network.
• Obtain IP Address from ADSL provider is greyed out.
• Choose Static IP Address if your network is locally defined and controlled and does not
use DHCP services. Type the IP address manually.
7.Specify IP address and Subnet mask if you selected a Static IP Address, and click Apply.
8.Click Yes to confirm, No to abort. The changes takes affect within five seconds after the network interface change notice appears.

You will see some ip addresses listed. The gateway ip address is the ip address of your router. Put that ip address into the address bar of your web browser and it will take you to the router config page. This is where you can do port forwarding if you want to be able to view the cameras from outside your network. Post a comment if you need any more help.

Or did you just forget your router password........or is the router not responding......let me know :)

First, you ned to login into your router (check the manuals for this, Netgear has this printed behind the router near Serial no. etc). Enable DHCP settings, allocate IP-address range say 192.168.0.1 to 192.168.0.5 (enough for 5 computers connecting via this router). Next, configure each computer to accept new IP-address from router by enabling DHCP. The settings on a Windows XP Professional Desktop:Need administrator access to your desktop, right-click on Network icon, Internet Protocol TCP/IP Properties, click on Properties button, then select Advanced properties, you can set DHCP from here.

Just a bit of explanation. E0 interface is for inside network (LAN interface). E1 is for outside (ISP or WAN physical interface). Dialer1 is for PPPoE (the "actual"/logical WAN interface). The 1.0.0.13 is ISP provided static IP address for the use of the server. This configuration example is for running FTP server, which uses the standard TCP port 20 and 21.

The LAN uses 10.10.10.0 network with 255.255.255.0 subnet for both servers and workstations. All servers within the LAN use static IP address. The router is configured as DHCP server to give out IP info (IP addresses, subnet mask, DNS) to workstations that are configured as DHCP client.

Basically I suggest that you deploy NAT (Network Address Translation) and PAT (Port Address Translation) to setup your own servers behind Cisco router. The NAT is used to translate the ISP's given static IP address to your local IP address. The PAT is used to translate TCP ports (the port 20 and 21) between the two IP addresses.

When using NAT/PAT, keep in mind that the Internet-accessible servers are seen from the Internet as their NAT/PAT-ed IP address (the Public IP address) and not the local IP address (not the Private IP address). This understanding is very important when you or someone need to test connectivity to the server and/or when you need to create filter (access list or ACL for short) to allow only certain incoming traffic from the Internet and block others.

Instruments used in this illustration are pretty much standard for running your own servers. Please note that IP addresses, username, and password are changed. However, you could always modify the configuration to suit your situation.

This sample configuration assumes that you have a block of IP from ISP. There is a dedicated Public IP address for the router WAN interface (the Dialer1 interface) and another dedicated Public IP address for the server PAT IP address. If you only have a single Public IP address for both router WAN interface and server PAT IP address, there are several ways to configure the router.

ip nat source static tcp 10.10.10.2 21 1.1.1.14 21 extendable
This one configuration way is suitable when you have static IP address from your ISP and you know exactly what the IP address is. In this case you have the 1.1.1.14 single static IP address for both the WAN interface and Public server IP address.

When you are unsure which IP address you receive from the ISP, or when your Public IP address keep changing; then another way to configure the static PAT is following

ip nat source static tcp 10.10.10.2 21 interface Dialer1 21 extendable
With situation of dynamic IP address, at some point you still need to know the exact Public IP address you receive from your ISP for server connection testing and production time. To find out, you can issue show ip interface brief command on the router. You will then see the associated WAN interface Public IP address.

Double check that the Default Gateway in TCP/IP properties is the routers LAN IP address (By default this is 192.168.1.1)
Without a gateway installed, there will be no Internet access.
After verifying this go to Start>Run and when the "Run" window appears type command into the "Open" Field, then click OK
Once the Command prompt appears type in:
ping 207.69.188.185.
If you don't get a reply, the gateway is not installed.
If there is a gateway already installed, check for any third party firewalls that may be installed on your computer. These can sometimes block Internet access.
For more information please see the related article on assigning a static IP address behind the router.
If still having problems, contact Linksys Technical Support.

Double check that the Default Gateway in TCP/IP properties is the routers LAN IP address (By default this is 192.168.1.1)
Without a gateway installed, there will be no Internet access.
After verifying this go to Start>Run and when the "Run" window appears type command into the "Open" Field, then click OK
Once the Command prompt appears type in:
ping 207.69.188.185.
If you don't get a reply, the gateway is not installed.
If there is a gateway already installed, check for any third party firewalls that may be installed on your computer. These can sometimes block Internet access.
For more information please see the related article on assigning a static IP address behind the router.
If still having problems, contact Linksys Technical Support.

Double check that the Default Gateway in TCP/IP properties is the routers LAN IP address (By default this is 192.168.1.1)
Without a gateway installed, there will be no Internet access.
After verifying this go to Start>Run and when the "Run" window appears type command into the "Open" Field, then click OK
Once the Command prompt appears type in:
ping 207.69.188.185.
If you don't get a reply, the gateway is not installed.
If there is a gateway already installed, check for any third party firewalls that may be installed on your computer. These can sometimes block Internet access.
For more information please see the related article on assigning a static IP address behind the router.
If still having problems, contact Linksys Technical Support.

Please see the related article on assigning a static IP address behind the router. If you still can not access websites, please try changing the static IP address you're using. For example if you're using the address 192.168.1.2, try 192.168.1.200. If that does not work please try the same static IP address on a different computer to see if it can use the information. If it can please try reinstalling your network card.
If that doesn't work please contact Linksys Technical Support.